Abstract
The development of precise RNA-editing tools is essential for the advancement of RNA therapeutics. CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) PspCas13b is a programmable RNA nuclease predicted to offer superior specificity because of its 30-nucleotide spacer sequence. However, its design principles and its on-target, off-target and collateral activities remain poorly characterized. Here, we present single-base tiled screening and computational analyses that identify key design principles for potent and highly selective RNA recognition and cleavage in human cells. We show that the de novo design of spacers containing guanosine bases at precise positions can greatly enhance the catalytic activity of inefficient CRISPR RNAs (crRNAs). These validated design principles (integrated into an online tool, https://cas13target.azurewebsites.net/) can predict highly effective crRNAs with ~90% accuracy. Furthermore, the comprehensive spacer–target mutagenesis revealed that PspCas13b can tolerate only up to four mismatches and requires ~26-nucleotide base pairing with the target to activate its nuclease domains, highlighting its superior specificity compared to other RNA or DNA interference tools. On the basis of this targeting resolution, we predict an extremely low probability of PspCas13b having off-target effects on other cellular transcripts. Proteomic analysis validated this prediction and showed that, unlike other Cas13 orthologs, PspCas13b exhibits potent on-target activity and lacks collateral effects.
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